Define Husserl’s lifeworld and how the concept of bracketing plays into it.

What will be an ideal response?


Edmund Husserl is commonly considered the founder of phenomenology. Husserl developed what he called “transcendental phenomenology,” which holds that there is no pure subjective subject or pure objective object. Rather, all consciousness is consciousness of something, Husserl used the term lifeworld (Lebenswelt) to refer to the world of existing assumptions as they are experienced and made meaningful in consciousness (Wagner 1973:63). Husserl (1913) explains how intentional consciousness, that is, directing our attention in one way or another, enables the phenomenologist to reconstruct or bracket his basic views on the world and himself and explore their interconnections. In doing so, Husserl made the lifeworld, or “thinking as usual” in everyday life situations, a legitimate object of investigation. Phenomenology investigates the systematic bracketing of all existing assumptions regarding the external world.

Sociology

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Symbolic interactionists argue that both formal and informal socialization play a role in sustaining social inequality

Indicate whether the statement is true or false.

Sociology

Today, husbands whose wives are employed outside the home do about an equal share of the unpaid domestic labor

a. True b. False Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Sociology

At what point does a village become a city?

a. A village is designated a city when the population reaches 30,000. b. A village becomes a city when the village becomes fully industrialized. c. Different countries define a city differently. d. A village must apply for permission to change designation to a city. e. When the mode of production is no longer agricultural, a village becomes a city.

Sociology

A measure of association whose value may vary depending on which variable is considered the independent variable and which the dependent variable is called a(n)

A. symmetrical measure. B. asymmetrical measure. C. interdependent associate. D. dependent associate.

Sociology